Prosecutor: Vial Croat drank from held deadly chemical
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — A deadly chemical was in the container from which a Croat war criminal drank shortly before dying, a Dutch prosecutor said Thursday, as an independent investigation into the dramatic death of Slobodan Praljak moved forward.
“There was a preliminary test of the substance in the container and all I can say for now is that there was a chemical substance in that container that can cause death,” Prosecutor Marilyn Fikenscher told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. She declined to elaborate on the exact nature of the substance.
Praljak, 72, stunned the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on Wednesday when he gulped down liquid from a small bottle seconds after a U.N. appeals judge confirmed a 20-year sentence against him.
The wartime commander of Bosnian Croat forces said in court that he had taken poison. He was rushed to a Hague hospital where he died, tribunal spokesman Nenad Golcevski said.
Praljak’s lawyer, Nika Pinter, said Thursday that she never expected him to kill himself and does know how he obtained the fatal liquid given the court’s strict security.
Pinter described Praljak to Croatia’s Hina news agency as “an honorable man who could not live with the war crimes conviction and leave that courtroom handcuffed.”
Praljak was originally convicted in 2013 of crimes including murder, persecution and deportation for his role in a plan to carve out a Bosnian Croat ministate in Bosnia in the early 1990s.
Fikenscher said that an autopsy, including toxicological tests, will be carried out soon on Praljak’s body.
Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said Thursday that Praljak wanted to send a message to the U.N. court that the verdict against him was unjust. Plenkovic said the former general was “obviously shaken by the possibility he would be convicted” of war crimes for his actions during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war.
Fikenscher said the Dutch investigation will look into how Praljak managed to take the small bottle of poison into the tribunal’s tightly guarded courtroom.
A lawyer who has frequently defended suspects at the war crimes court said it would be easy to bring poison into the court.